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Acta Poloniae Historica

Conceptualizing Inter-religious Relations in the Ottoman Empire: The Early Modern Centuries
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  4. THE WEALTH OF DIVERSITY – INTER-RELIGIOUS AND INTER-CONFESSIONAL CONTACTS IN CENTRAL AND EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE IN THE EARL

Conceptualizing Inter-religious Relations in the Ottoman Empire: The Early Modern Centuries

Authors

  • Eleni Gara Department of Social Anthropology and History University of the Aegean (Mytilene, Greece)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12775/APH.2017.116.03

Keywords

Muslims, Christians, Jews, Ottoman Empire, interreligious relations, millet system, plural society, confessionalization, tolerance, discrimination, coexistence, religious strife

Abstract

This article presents the points of view from which interreligious relations in the Ottoman world have been approached in academic historiography, the frames of interpretation and concepts that have been used, and the critical reassessments and revisions that are currently underway. Conceptions about the position of the non-Muslims and the nature and forms of interreligious relations in the Ottoman Empire have changed perceptively over the last half century. The mosaic world of subjugated nations and self-governed religious communities (millets) that lived parallel and distinct lives gave its place, in the last two decades of the twentieth century, to the plural society of extensive interreligious interaction at individual or communal level. In tandem came the shift from an emphasis on the oppression of the non-Muslims to that on toleration. We are now in a new phase of revision which focuses on the forms, extent and limits of toleration and intercommunal interaction, and pays close attention to change over time.

Author Biography

Eleni Gara, Department of Social Anthropology and History University of the Aegean (Mytilene, Greece)

Eleni Gara – early modern history of the Balkans; assistant professor at the Department of Social Anthropology and History, University of the Aegean in Mytilene, Greece

References

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Kołodziejczyk Dariusz, ‘The “Turkish yoke” revisited: The Ottoman non-Muslim subjects between loyalty, alienation, and riot’, Acta Poloniae Historica, 93 (2006), 177–95.

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Acta Poloniae Historica

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Published

2018-08-10

How to Cite

1.
GARA, Eleni. Conceptualizing Inter-religious Relations in the Ottoman Empire: The Early Modern Centuries. Acta Poloniae Historica. Online. 10 August 2018. Vol. 116, pp. 57-91. [Accessed 19 May 2025]. DOI 10.12775/APH.2017.116.03.
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Vol. 116 (2017)

Section

THE WEALTH OF DIVERSITY – INTER-RELIGIOUS AND INTER-CONFESSIONAL CONTACTS IN CENTRAL AND EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE IN THE EARL

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